Pakistani family find refuge in EU after death threats over false blasphemy claims

Pakistani family find refuge in EU after death threats over false blasphemy claims

Zehmat Akhtar

A Pakistani man and his parents received asylum in the EU last week after having gone through an “unspeakable ordeal”.

In 2014, a court sentenced Zehmat Akhtar’s parents, Shagufta Kausar and Shafqat Emmanuel to death by hanging over allegations of blasphemy.

The Lahore High Court overturned their death sentence in June this year. The Christian family now face death threats by extremists despite having been acquitted.

Mr Akhtar remembers when the police came to arrest his parents in 2013: “I saw the police beating my father. He is paralysed from the waist down, so he didn’t feel pain in his legs, but they also hit him in his face and beat him with gun butts on his back. They forced him to say that he had committed blasphemy”.

The couple had been living in poverty with their four children in a mission compound of the Gojra Church in the province of Punjab, Pakistan. On 18 June 2013, allegedly blasphemous text messages were sent to a cleric and a lawyer from a phone allegedly registered in Shagufta Kausar’s name.

Ms Kausar and her husband Shafqat Emmanuel were arrested and charged with blasphemy on 21 July 2013. The couple is illiterate and would not have been able to write any text messages at all. Ms Kauser claimed that her phone had been missing for a month at the time of the incident. It is uncertain who sent the messages and for what reason.

Blasphemy is punishable by death in Pakistan, and though no one has been formally executed for it, dozens have been killed by mobs after being accused of the crime. Mr Emmanuel had been tortured into making a false confession. They beat him and threatened to strip Ms Kausar naked and let her walk across town.

Tehmina Arora, director of advocacy, Asia with ADF International, a human rights organisation supporting the couple, said: “We are delighted that Shagufta and Shafqat have, at long last, been released and have reached safety. Sadly, their case is not an isolated incident but testifies to the plight that many Christians and other religious minorities experience in Pakistan today.

“While the right to religious freedom is protected by the Pakistani constitution, many face severe persecution and denial of their fundamental rights to freedom of expression and assembly.”

Mr Emmanuel said: “We are so relieved to finally be free. The last eight years have been an unspeakable ordeal, but we are so happy to be reunited with our children. We are very grateful that so many people, especially the teams from ADF International and the Jubilee Campaign, helped and protected us by bringing us to safety.

“Although we will miss our country, we are happy to finally be somewhere safe. Hopefully, the blasphemy laws in Pakistan will soon be abolished, so others won’t suffer the same fate as Shagufta and I.”

The couple’s lawyer, Saif Ul Malook, said: “Shagufta and Shafqat are incredibly relieved to have finally been acquitted of these unfounded blasphemy charges. The many delays to the hearing of their appeal caused them a lot of suffering. These cases are very difficult to litigate, due to the concern for security. There is a very real threat to the life of the clients and the lawyers.”

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